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Racing in one of Radical's many single-marque race series is the ultimate driving experience, the thrill of battling wheel-to-wheel with over thirty other Radicals provides an adrenaline rush beyond compare.

Radical Caribbean SR3 Cup

The Radical Caribbean SR3 Cup is the region’s premier one-make racing category in which all competitors race in identical 1340cc SR3s.

The championship was established at Bushy Park in Barbados but visits circuits in Trinidad and Guyana also, with a truly multinational roster of drivers, many of whom dovetailing their Caribbean Cup campaigns with outing in Radicals other international series.

Due to the warm Caribbean climate, the series enjoys a longer season than many other championships, with rounds commencing in February and the finale in November.

The fastest race cars in the region

The Radical Caribbean SR3 Cup first ran in 2018, a four-round series contested at head-lining race meetings in Barbados, Guyana and Trinidad & Tobago. The launch of the regional competition followed three successful seasons of the Barbados-based Suzuki Challenge Series (SCS), which also hosted the off-season Radical Carnival for three years, attracting drivers from Europe and the United States.

Regional motor sport rivalry is nothing new – racing drivers and motorcyclists have fought for supremacy for six decades or more, something which surprises many who see cricket as the major sport in the West Indies. Organised racing and rallying has existed since the 1950s, with travel between the territories common even in the early years, long before the phrase ‘sports tourism’ was coined.

Although the dates are yet to be confirmed, the 2019 series will be expanded to five rounds, with three races over each weekend. The venues will host rounds in the same order as last year, starting with the Frankie Boodram Wallerfield International Raceway in Trinidad & Tobago, followed by Bushy Park Barbados, with the final at South Dakota in Guyana. At 2.01 kilometres, Bushy Park International is the longest, while each circuit presents a different driver challenge.

A total of 73 SR3 Cup races had been run in the Caribbean by the end of 2018, with Stuart Maloney crowned the inaugural regional Champion, his title a long time coming for the only driver not to have missed a race. He also tops the race-winners table, with 17, three ahead of his brother Sean (Overall Champion in 2015-’16), with Suleman Esuf (Overall Champion in 2016-’17 and 2017) third on 12 wins. While he is only fourth on the race-winners table with 10, the third Maloney brother Mark dominates the other stats, with 38 additional podiums and record numbers of pole positions (8) and fastest laps (21). Another eight of the 34 drivers who have competed are race-winners, led by Guyana’s Kristian Jeffrey, with seven; the 2017 Winter Champion, he spent the last two seasons in the UK Radical Challenge Championship, finishing 2018 in fourth place.

The series is administered by Bushy Park Circuit Inc (BPCI), which was appointed sole distributor for Radical Sportscars in the Caribbean at the end of 2017. The company liaises with the Organising Clubs in each of the host countries to ensure a level playing field for all competitors and is responsible for co-ordinating the shipping of cars around the region, along with the technical support team and spares package.